Department of Nutrition Dietetics and Food, 22457Monash University, Victoria, VIC, Australia.
Deakin University, 22457Geelong, Australia.
J Health Serv Res Policy. 2022 Jan;27(1):74-84. doi: 10.1177/13558196211041835. Epub 2021 Dec 7.
Culturally safe health care services contribute to improved health outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in Australia. Yet there has been no comprehensive systematic review of the literature on what constitutes culturally safe health care practice. This gap in knowledge contributes to ongoing challenges providing culturally safe health services and policy. This review explores culturally safe health care practice from the perspective of Indigenous Peoples as recipients of health care in Western high-income countries, with a specific focus on Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples.
A systematic meta-ethnographic review of peer-reviewed literature was undertaken across five databases: Ovid MEDLINE, Scopus, PsychINFO, CINAHL Plus and Informit. Eligible studies included Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples receiving health care in Australia, had a focus on exploring health care experiences, and a qualitative component to study design. Two authors independently determined study eligibility (5554 articles screened). Study characteristics and results were extracted and quality appraisal was conducted. Data synthesis was conducted using meta-ethnography methodology, contextualised by health care setting.
Thirty-four eligible studies were identified. Elements of culturally safe health care identified were inter-related and included personable two-way communication, a well-resourced Indigenous health workforce, trusting relationships and supportive health care systems that are responsive to Indigenous Peoples' cultural knowledge, beliefs and values.
These elements can form the basis of interventions and strategies to promote culturally safe health care practice and systems in Australia. Future cultural safety interventions need to be rigorously evaluated to explore their impact on Indigenous Peoples' satisfaction with health care and improvements in health care outcomes.
文化安全的医疗保健服务有助于改善澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的健康结果。然而,对于构成文化安全医疗实践的内容,尚未有全面的文献系统综述。这种知识上的差距导致在提供文化安全的医疗服务和政策方面持续存在挑战。本综述从西方高收入国家原住民作为医疗保健接受者的角度探讨了文化安全的医疗保健实践,特别关注澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民。
对五个数据库(Ovid MEDLINE、Scopus、PsychINFO、CINAHL Plus 和 Informit)进行了同行评审文献的系统元民族志综述。合格的研究包括在澳大利亚接受医疗保健的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民,重点探讨医疗保健体验,以及研究设计的定性部分。两位作者独立确定了研究的合格性(筛选了 5554 篇文章)。提取了研究特征和结果,并进行了质量评估。使用元民族志方法进行了数据分析,同时考虑了医疗保健环境。
确定了 34 项合格的研究。确定的文化安全医疗保健的要素相互关联,包括有人情味的双向沟通、资源充足的原住民卫生工作者、信任关系以及支持性的医疗保健系统,这些系统对原住民的文化知识、信仰和价值观做出响应。
这些要素可以为在澳大利亚促进文化安全的医疗保健实践和系统提供基础。未来的文化安全干预措施需要进行严格评估,以探讨其对原住民对医疗保健的满意度和医疗保健结果改善的影响。